
TheJanuary 27, 2007 anti-war protest was ananti-war march sponsored byUnited for Peace and Justice inWashington, D.C. The official event consisted of a rally and march at theUnited States Capitol.
At the protest, it was announced that at least 500,000 attended to the protest, according to aerial photography estimates.Associated Press, however, reported that the march drew "tens of thousands".[1]
The January 27, 2007 protest in Washington, D.C. was part of a broader anti‑Iraq War movement, organized to oppose continuation of the U.S. military presence in Iraq and to pressure Congress and the White House to end the war. Demonstrators demanded the withdrawal of U.S. troops and an end to war funding, reflecting widespread public discontent with the conflict.[2]
On January 27, 2007, thousands of demonstrators gathered on the National Mall and near the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., marching and holding rallies calling for an end to the Iraq War. Marchers chanted slogans such as “Bring our troops home” and featured speeches, performances, and coordinated lobbying efforts.[3]
The protest included a diverse group of participants, including Iraq War veterans, family members of fallen soldiers, peace activists, lawmakers, and public figures. Actress Jane Fonda addressed the crowd, marking one of her first large anti‑war speeches in decades, highlighting the generational breadth of support for ending the war.[4]

Ablack bloc, organized byStudents for a Democratic Society, and advertised as a "radical youth bloc" on the DCIndymedia site,[5] met atDupont Circle to begin a feeder march to the main rally site on theNational Mall. The march from Dupont Circle to the National Mall roughly followedMassachusetts AvenueNW to its intersection with 7th Street NW near theWashington Convention Center and then on 7th Street throughChinatown and thePenn Quarter prior to reaching the National Mall. The feeder march continued past the back of the mainstream rally on 7th Street, and onto Maryland AvenueSW, before briefly stopping at 3rd Street, at roughly the center line of the Mall.[6]
United States Capitol Police stopped the SDS feeder march near the corner of 3rd and Maryland. As the march turned north, police blocked protesters who walked onto theCapitol lawn. Other protesters, both from the march and on the Mall, moved up in support. The Capitol police moved back to the Capitol building. Some participants in this group left graffiti on the Capitol grounds.[7]

In the late afternoon, approximately 30 demonstrators marched to the Armed Forces Recruiting Center on 14th Street. The window at the recruitment center and the window of aFox News van were smashed,[citation needed][8] and the demonstrators dispersed soon afterward.
Acounter-protest, which was organized byFree Republic, drew approximately 30 people in the vicinity. Organizers of the counter-protest claimed that anti-war efforts hurt the U.S.-ledwar on terror.[1]